The Psychological Impact of UAP/NHI Disclosure
A Framework for Understanding Public Response and Preparedness
Published by The Disclosure Foundation

Official disclosure regarding unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP) is already underway. Government agencies in several countries, including the United States, have acknowledged that UAP exist and that some incidents remain unexplained, and federal agencies have begun releasing previously classified records related to UAP and possible non-human intelligence (NHI). Public health authorities, however, have not yet formally addressed the psychological consequences such a disclosure could carry.
This white paper examines that gap. Drawing on research across psychology, public health, and crisis communication, alongside relevant historical precedent, it identifies the factors most likely to shape public response to UAP/NHI disclosure and outlines preparedness strategies intended to support psychological resilience and reduce avoidable societal disruption.
Its central premise is that public response will be determined not by the disclosed information alone, but by how that information is interpreted through individual psychology and the cultural environment into which it arrives. Responses are therefore expected to vary widely. Most people would adapt without lasting impairment, vulnerability is likely to concentrate within specific higher-risk populations, and the principal public health concern is system strain rather than mass panic.
The analysis is presented with explicit attention to its limitations, drawing on the best available evidence in the absence of privileged access to classified information. The executive briefing below summarizes the central findings and preparedness recommendations; the full white paper develops the analysis and its supporting literature in depth.
Read the report
Switch between the executive briefing and the full white paper, or download either document.





